• Arthritis and rheumatism · Mar 2004

    The genetic contribution to muscle strength, knee pain, cartilage volume, bone size, and radiographic osteoarthritis: a sibpair study.

    • Guangju Zhai, James Stankovich, Changhai Ding, Fiona Scott, Flavia Cicuttini, and Graeme Jones.
    • University of Tasmania, Hobart, Tasmania, Australia.
    • Arthritis Rheum. 2004 Mar 1; 50 (3): 805-10.

    ObjectiveTo estimate the heritability of muscle strength, knee pain, cartilage volume, bone size, and radiographic osteoarthritis (ROA), and to assess whether heritability of the knee structural components is independent of ROA.MethodsA sibpair design was utilized. Sagittal T1-weighted fat-suppressed magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) of the right knee was performed to determine cartilage volume and bone size. Standing semiflexed radiographs of the same knee were obtained to assess the presence of ROA. Knee pain was assessed by questionnaire and muscle strength by dynamometry. Heritability was estimated using the genetic analysis program SOLAR.ResultsA total of 128 subjects (61 men, 67 women; mean age 45 years) from 51 families representing 115 sibpairs were studied. Lower limb muscle strength had high heritability (42%; P = 0.02), as did knee pain (44%; P = 0.07). Heritability estimates for cartilage volume were 65% for medial tibial cartilage, 77% for lateral tibial cartilage, and 84% for patellar cartilage, and heritability estimates for bone size were 85% for medial tibial bone area, 57% for lateral tibial bone area, and 70% for patella bone volume (all P < or = 0.004). For ROA, heritability was 61% for presence (with a large standard error) (P = 0.16) and 61% for severity (P = 0.02). The estimates for tibial bone areas were the only ones markedly reduced after adjustment for body size, while all estimates with the exception of knee pain were independent of ROA. Cartilage and, to a lesser extent, bone sites investigated by MRI were largely under independent genetic control, with a lesser shared genetic component.ConclusionWith the exception of prevalent ROA, all knee modalities assessed had high heritability, most likely reflecting a strong genetic component. Cartilage volume, bone size, and muscle strength all have the potential to be studied in quantitative trait linkage analyses, but their exact relevance with regard to OA remains uncertain at this time.

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